Cryptococcosis claims close to 200,000 lives annually. There is no vaccine clinically available for this fungal disease.
Invasive fungal diseases cause millions of deaths each year. There are currently approximately 300,000 acute cases of aspergillosis, most of which result from a pulmonary infection of immunocompromised patients by the common soil organism and opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. Patients are treated with antifungal drugs, such as amphotericin B (AmB). However, AmB has serious limitations due to human organ toxicity. AmB is slightly less toxic if loaded in liposomes, such as AmBisome or AmB-loaded liposomes (AmB-LLs). Even with antifungal therapy, recurrent infections are common, and 1-year fatality rates may exceed 50%. We have previously shown that coating AmB-LLs with the extracellular oligomannan-binding domain of the C-type lectin receptor Dectin-2 (DEC2-AmB-LLs) effectively targets DEC2-AmB-LLs to cell walls, exopolysaccharide matrices, and biofilms of fungal pathogens in vitro. In vitro, DEC2-AmB-LLs reduce the effective dose of AmB for 95% inhibition and killing of A. fumigatus 10-fold compared to that of untargeted AmB-LLs. Herein we tested the antifungal activity of DEC2-AmB-LLs relative to that of untargeted AmB-LLs in immunosuppressed mice with pulmonary aspergillosis. Remarkably, DEC2-AmB-LLs bound 30-fold more efficiently to A. fumigatus at sites of infection in the lungs. Furthermore, Dectin-2-targeted liposomes delivering AmB at a dose of 0.2 mg/kg of body weight significantly reduced the fungal burden in lungs compared to results with untargeted AmB-LLs at 0.2 mg/kg and micellar voriconazole at 20 mg/kg and prolonged mouse survival. By dramatically increasing the efficacy of antifungal drugs at low doses, targeted liposomes have the potential to create a new clinical paradigm to treat diverse fungal diseases. IMPORTANCE Invasive aspergillosis (IA) generally results from a pulmonary infection of immunocompromised patients by the common soil organism and opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. The susceptible population has expanded rapidly due to the increased number of cancer patients with immunocompromising chemotherapy and transplant patients taking immunosuppressants. Patients are treated with antifungals, such as liposomal amphotericin B, with per-patient costs exceeding $50,000 in the United States. However, AmB has serious side effects due to host toxicity, which limits its usage and contributes to the lack of fungal clearance in patients at safe doses. Fifty percent of IA patients die within a year. Herein, we employed liposomal amphotericin B coated with the innate immune receptor Dectin-2 to direct antifungals specifically to the fungal pathogen. Using two mouse models of pulmonary aspergillosis, we demonstrate that Dectin-2-targeted delivery of amphotericin B to A. fumigatus resulted in remarkably higher efficacy than that of the untargeted antifungal formulations.
Aspergillus fumigatus is the most common opportunistic human fungal pathogen responsible for invasive aspergillosis. Gene manipulation is critical for the investigation of A. fumigatus biology and pathogenesis at the molecular level, and it often requires integration of the introduced DNA into the fungal genome. Here we have searched and identified two potential “safe haven” regions, SH1 and SH2, based on A. fumigatus genome annotation and transcriptome data. When a DNA fragment carrying a fluorescent protein gene mNeonGreen (mNG) and a drug selection marker was inserted into SH1 or SH2, the expression of mNeonGreen was easily detected, indicating that SH1 and SH2 are not surpressive genetic regions. We found that insertion of this DNA fragment into SH1 did not cause any significant changes in the expression of neighboring genes. Insertion of this DNA into either SH1 or SH2 did not significantly alter any of the phenotypes that we analyzed comparing to the wild type control. By comparison, transformants with random ectopic integration of the same DNA fragment showed a wider range of variation in mNeonGreen expression and in virulence in an insect infection model. Having identified predetermined “safe-haven” regions in A. fumigatus could therefore help reduce experimental variations and increase reproducibility, as it has been for the C. neoformans field.
Candida albicans causes life-threatening disseminated candidiasis. Individuals at greatest risk have weakened immune systems. An outer cell wall, exopolysaccharide matrix, and biofilm rich in oligoglucans and oligomannans help Candida spp. evade host defenses. Even after antifungal treatment, the one-year mortality rate exceeds 25%. Undoubtedly, there is room to improve drug performance. The mammalian C-type lectin pathogen receptors Dectin-1 and Dectin-2 bind to fungal oligoglucans and oligomannans, respectively. We previously coated amphotericin B-loaded liposomes, AmB-LLs, pegylated analogs of AmBisome, with the ligand binding domains of these two Dectins. DectiSomes, DEC1-AmB-LLs and DEC2-AmB-LLs, showed two distinct patterns of binding to the exopolysaccharide matrix surrounding C. albicans hyphae grown in vitro. Here we showed that DectiSomes were preferentially associated with fungal colonies in the kidneys. In a neutropenic mouse model of candidiasis, DEC1-AmB-LLs and DEC2-AmB-LLs delivering only one dose of 0.2 mg/kg AmB reduced the kidney fungal burden several fold relative to AmB-LLs. DEC1-AmB-LLs and DEC2-AmB-LLs increased the percent of surviving mice 2.5-fold and 8.3-fold, respectively, relative to AmB-LLs. Dectin-2 targeting of anidulafungin loaded liposomes, DEC2-AFG-LLs, and of commercial AmBisome, DEC2-AmBisome, reduced fungal burden in the kidneys several fold over their untargeted counterparts. The data herein suggest that targeting of a variety of antifungal drugs to fungal glycans may achieve lower safer effective doses and improve drug efficacy against a variety of invasive fungal infections.
The environmental pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans claims over 180,000 lives each year. Survival of this basidiomycete at host CO2 concentrations has only recently been considered an important virulence trait. Through screening gene knockout libraries constructed in a CO2-tolerant clinical strain, we found mutations leading to CO2 sensitivity are enriched in pathways activated by heat stress, including calcineurin, Ras1-Cdc24, cell wall integrity, and Regulator of Ace2 and Morphogenesis (RAM). Overexpression of Cbk1, the conserved terminal kinase of the RAM pathway, partially restored defects of these mutants at host CO2 or temperature levels. In ascomycetes such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans, transcription factor Ace2 is an important target of Cbk1, activating genes responsible for cell separation. However, no Ace2 homolog or any downstream component of the RAM pathway has been identified in basidiomycetes. Through in vitro evolution and comparative genomics, we characterized mutations in suppressors of cbk1D in C. neoformans that partially rescued defects in CO2 tolerance, thermotolerance, and morphology. One suppressor is the RNA translation repressor Ssd1, which is highly conserved in ascomycetes and basidiomycetes. The other is a novel ribonuclease domain-containing protein, here named PSC1, which is present in basidiomycetes and humans but surprisingly absent in most ascomycetes. Loss of Ssd1 in cbk1D partially restored cryptococcal ability to survive and amplify in the inhalation and intravenous murine models of cryptococcosis. Our discoveries highlight the overlapping regulation of CO2 tolerance and thermotolerance, the essential role of the RAM pathway in cryptococcal adaptation to the host condition, and the potential importance of post-transcriptional control of virulence traits in this global pathogen.
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